March 23rd, 2012

history. written by the victors.

March 23rd, 2012

the revolution must be televised because the only time we’ll rise up is during a commercial break

March 7th, 2012
Try to understand this at any rate: if violence began this very evening and if exploitation and oppression had never existed on the earth, perhaps the slogans of non-violence might end the quarrel. But if the whole regime, even your non-violent ideas, are conditioned by a thousand-year-old oppression, your passivity serves only to place you in the ranks of the oppressors.
Jean-Paul Sartre
March 6th, 2012
You only have power over people so long as you don’t take everything away from them. But when you’ve robbed a man of everything, he’s no longer in your power - he’s free again.
Alexander Solzhenitsyn
March 6th, 2012
An unrealistic perception of life is the basis of fear. The current predicament people are facing is that they are not willing to live, just as they are not willing to die. This fear comes from not living with life but living within ones mind. People always have a fear about what is going to happen next, meaning that there is a constant fear of something that does not yet exist. If ones fear the nonexistent, then their struggle is purely imaginative and existent only within the mind. People are always suffering from either the memory of what happened yesterday or the thought of may happen tomorrow, neither of which are rooted in reality but are manifestations of the mind. Being lost in these thoughts is the basis of fear.
Sadhguru
July 28th, 2011

Social Change Rarely Comes Gradually

Our schoolbooks would like us to believe that social change must always be gradual and peaceful. Sudden, abrupt changes are seen as disruptions of a “normal” functioning society. “Respectable” society looks upon mass protest, civil disobedience, strikes, disruption and revolution with horror. But fundamental social change rarely comes gradually. Industrial unions didn’t come to this country by the gradual addition, year after year, of few new unions. On the contrary, mass industrial unionism came in an explosion of organizing and mass strikes over a period of about five years, from 1934 to 1938. The gains of the civil rights movement were achieved through heroic civil disobedience and mass protest in the face of systematic racist terror.

While governments caution the governed to act peacefully and to refrain from drastic action, they themselves reserve the right to use overwhelming force. There was nothing gradual about the invasion of Iraq.

Revolution is the ultimate social leap - a period when the gradual accumulation of mass bitterness and anger of the exploited and oppressed coalesces and bursts forth into a mass movement to overturn existing social relations and replace them with new ones. A few days of revolutionary upheaval bring more change than decades of “normal” development. Rulers and systems that seemed invincible and immovable are suddenly unceremoniously toppled. Revolution is not an aberration in an otherwise smoothly functioning society.

The last three centuries have been filled not only with wars, but also with revolutions and near-revolutions. A list of only some of these gives us an idea of the scope of revolutionary upheaval since the dawn of modern capitalism; the American Revolution (1776-87), the French Revolution (1789-94), the US Civil War (1861-65), the European revolutions of 1848, the Russian Revolutions (1905 and 1917), the German Revolution (1918-1923), Chine (1925-1927), the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) the Hungarian Revolution (1956), Chile (1973), Portugal (1974-75), Iran (1979), Poland’s Solidarnosc uprising (1980-81). This partial list is enough to put to rest the notion that revolutions are rare or unusual occurrences.”

—Paul D’Amato, The Meaning of Marxism

July 28th, 2011

The Story of Your Enslavement (by stefbot)

July 4th, 2011

Happy Fourth

It seems all too fitting that as Americans we celebrate our ‘freedom’ in the jubilatious glow of something that was invented and manufactured by the Chinese.

July 3rd, 2011

There is nothing more sacred to the maintenance of democracy than a free press. Access to comprehensive, accurate and quality information is essential to the manifestation of Socratic citizenship - the society characterized by a civically engaged, well-informed and socially invested populace. Thus, to the degree that access to quality information is willfully or unintentionally obstructed, democracy itself is degraded

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@armrevo

As you cross any given delineation and embark onto a new territory just remember that all borders are inherently arbitrary. Anything can be separated from anything else, just as a sense of vibrant discontinuity can be created where there was none previously. So as yesterday becomes today just remember that both will eventually consist as part of the same memory tomorrow.

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